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We are a young department—founded in 2003—but we are founded on decades of research and education in medicine and engineering at one of our nation’s oldest and most distinguished universities.
Biomedical Engineering has two, related, goals: the use of the tools and methods of engineering to better understand human physiology and disease and the development of new technologies for disease diagnosis, treatment, and prevention.
Biomedical engineering research at Yale is far-reaching and includes: non-invasive imaging of brain structure and function, biomechanical analysis of spine function, drug delivery systems for treating cancer, tissue engineering to repair the retina. In the past few years, Yale has aggressively expanded its faculty in the biomedical engineering field, invested in state-of-the-art laboratory space [see below], and launched new educational programs and research initiatives. This process has been animated by a strong commitment on the part of Yale’s School of Engineering & Applied Science and School of Medicine to mesh their respective strengths into a true partnership.
Our projects are performed by interdisciplinary teams composed of professors, research scientists and engineers, and students. For more about these projects, look at the web pages of our faculty members.
In our teaching, we help our biomedical engineering students integrate knowledge from the biological sciences into an engineering framework by way of a carefully planned program that combines classroom and laboratory coursework, independent research projects, and design projects by student teams within the context of Yale’s renowned liberal education.
I invite you to learn more about us and join us as we learn and grow and develop new approaches for improving human health.
W. Mark Saltzman Chair Department of Biomedical Engineering
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